An apparatus and methods for a non-volatile magnetic random access memory (MRAM) device that includes a word line, a bit line, and a magnetic thin film memory element located at an intersection of the word and bit lines. The magnetic thin film memory element includes an alloy of a rare earth element and a transition metal element. The word line is operable to heat the magnetic thin film memory element when a heating current is applied. heating of the magnetic thin film memory element to a predetermined temperature reduces its coercivity, which allows switching of the magnetic state upon application of a magnetic field. The magnetic state of the thin film element can be determined in accordance with principles of the Hall effect.
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12. A method of manufacturing a magnetic random access memory (MRAM) cell, the method comprising:
forming a word line;
forming a bit line; and
forming a magnetic thin film memory element comprising only magnetic material in one or more planar magnetic layers, and located at an intersection of the word line and the bit line, wherein the magnetic layers comprise an alloy of a rare earth element and a transition metal element, wherein the word line is operable to provide a current to the memory element capable of heating the magnetic thin film memory element to a threshold temperature.
1. A magnetic random access memory (MRAM) cell comprising:
a word line;
a bit line; and
a planar magnetic thin film memory element located at an intersection of the word line and the bit line, wherein the magnetic thin film memory element comprises only magnetic material in one or more planar magnetic layers, the magnetic layers comprising an alloy of a rare earth element and a transition metal element, wherein the word line is operable to provide a current to heat the magnetic thin film memory element to a predetermined threshold and thereby reduce coercivity of the memory element.
16. A magnetic random access memory (MRAM) cell comprising:
a word line;
a bit line;
a magnetic thin film memory element comprising only magnetic material in one or more planar magnetic layers, and located at an intersection of the word line and the bit line, wherein the word line is operable to apply a current to the magnetic thin film memory element and thereby reduce coercivity of the memory element to a predetermined threshold;
a write line parallel to the word line and proximate to the memory element, wherein the reduced coercivity in combination with a magnetic field from current passing through the write line is sufficient to switch the magnetic state of the magnetic thin film memory element.
8. A method of writing to a magnetic random access memory (MRAM) cell, the method comprising:
applying a heating current to a word line to heat a magnetic memory element to a threshold temperature to reduce coercivity of the memory element, wherein the memory element comprises only magnetic material in one or more planar magnetic layers, the magnetic layers comprising an alloy of a rare earth element and a transition metal element;
when the threshold temperature is met, applying current to a line to generate a magnetic field at the memory element, wherein the line is parallel to the word line and proximate to the memory element; and
switching a magnetic state of the memory element by the combination of the reduced coercivity and the generated magnetic field.
2. An MRAM memory cell according to
3. An MRAM memory cell according to
4. An MRAM memory cell according to
5. An MRAM memory cell according to
6. An MRAM memory cell according to
7. An MRAM memory cell according to
9. A method of writing to an MRAM cell according to
10. A method of writing to an MRAM cell according to
11. A method of writing to an MRAM cell according to
13. A method of manufacturing according to
14. A method of manufacturing according to
15. An MRAM memory cell according to
17. An MRAM cell according to
18. An MRAM cell according to
19. An MRAM cell according to
20. An MRAM cell according to
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Disclosed embodiments herein relate generally to nonvolatile memory, and more particularly to magnetic random access memory (MRAM) cells, MRAM memory arrays, and a method using the same.
Magnetic random access memory (MRAM) is a type of non-volatile memory that uses magnetism rather than electrical power to store data. Conventional MRAM cells are described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/907,977, entitled “Magnetic Random Access Memory Device,” by Jhon Jhy Liaw, and are herein incorporated by reference.
Similar to other types of magnetic memory cells, the MTJ MRAM cell has a low logical state and a high logical state associated with a low resistance state and a high resistance state respectively, or vice-versa. When the fixed ferromagnetic layer 104 and the free ferromagnetic layer 106 have the same polarization for their magnetic fields, the MTJ MRAM cell will be in a low resistance state. When their polarizations are opposite, the MTJ MRAM cell will be in a high resistance state. The resistance state can be read or detected by having a current flow from one magnetic layer to the other through the insulating material 102. The high or low resistance state determines the output current from an MRAM cell. Conventionally, a sense amplifier is used to compare the output current with a reference cell.
Conventional MRAM cells have several limitations. One limitation is that of speed in reading data from the cells. Currently, logic circuits are operating at frequencies in the GHz ranges. However, conventional MRAM devices are constrained to operate at much slower rates, causing a significant performance gap between the logic and the MRAM memory. This performance gap results in a suboptimal performance of the logic circuits because supporting MRAM memory devices cannot provide data and instructions fast enough. Thus, this results in a bottleneck effect at the MRAM devices, particularly in System on Chip (SoC) designs, which combine memory with logic circuitry on a chip.
Disclosed herein are magnetic random access memory (MRAM) cells, MRAM memory arrays, and a method using the same. A magnetic state of the cell may be written using thermally-assisted writing of a logical state. The cell may be read using principles in accordance with the Hall effect.
In an exemplary embodiment, an MRAM cell includes a word line, a bit line, and a magnetic thin film memory element located at an intersection of the word line and the bit line. The magnetic thin film memory element includes an alloy of a rare earth element and a transition metal element. The word line is operable to heat the magnetic thin film memory element when a heating current is applied.
An MRAM cell may be written to by applying a heating current to a word line to heat a magnetic memory layer to a threshold temperature. When the threshold temperature is met, a current is applied to a line (parallel to the word line) to generate a magnetic field. Heating the magnetic memory layer reduces the coercivity of the magnetic layer. The heating current in combination with the magnetic field switches the magnetic state of the magnetic memory layer.
An MRAM cell may be read by applying a read current to a word line. A magnetic field from the applied read current exerts a transverse force on the moving charge carriers in the thin film memory element, pushing them to one side of the element. In accordance with the principles of the Hall effect, the voltage across the thin film memory element may be measured. The voltage will have a positive polarity associated with a first logical state and a negative polarity associated with a second logical state. Thus, depending on the magnetization direction stored in the thin film element, the logical state can be determined.
An MRAM cell may be manufactured by forming a word line, forming a bit line, and forming a magnetic thin film memory element located at an intersection of the word line and the bit line. The magnetic thin film memory element that is formed includes an alloy of a rare earth element and a transition metal element. The word line that is formed is operable to heat the magnetic thin film memory element when a heating current is applied.
For a more complete understanding of the principles disclosed herein, and the advantages thereof, reference is now made to the following descriptions taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
In operation, generally the MRAM cell 200 may be written to by first applying a current to the word line 204 which heats the thin film memory layer 202 to a threshold temperature. The action of heating to the threshold temperature reduces the coercivity of the thin film magnetic layer 202. As used here, coercivity is the level of demagnetizing force that would need to be applied to reduce the permanent magnetization to zero. Coercivity is the property of the magnetic thin film memory layer 202 that indicates its resistance to demagnetization and determines the maximum signal frequency that can be recorded by the memory element. Hc is the common abbreviation for coercivity.
A demagnetizing field of a level in excess of the coercivity must be applied to a magnetic particle in order to coerce it to change the direction of its magnetization. Now that the coercivity is reduced, the magnetic state may be flipped with a reduced applied magnetization force. This is because current-induced heating lowers the anisotropy of the thin-film memory layer 202 and reduces the current density required for field or spin-transfer-based writing.
MRAM cell array 300 includes thin film memory elements 302-318, which are arranged on parallel word lines 320-324, and parallel bit lines 326-330 that are perpendicular to the word lines 320-324, as shown in the figure. In operation, as previously described, a current is applied to a word line (e.g., 322) to heat a selected cell (e.g., 310). Upon sufficient heating of thin film memory element 310, a current is applied through an adjacent word line e.g., 320 and/or 324 to apply an appropriate magnetic field to change the magnetization state of the thin film memory element 310. For instance, the current direction through word line 320 and/or 324 will influence the magnetic field factor that will be upon the thin film memory element 310, and if a current is applied in one direction through word line 320 and in the opposite direction through word line 324, this will provide a magnetizing force in the same direction through thin film memory element 310.
Whereas in the example of the first embodiment, in writing to a thin film memory element, a writing current was applied to adjacent word lines, the second embodiment differs in that a magnetizing force is instead generated by applying current through the appropriate write lines selected from 732-742. As would be appreciated by one of average skill in the art, this MRAM cell array 700 can be extended in various directions to produce a memory of a much larger size and capacity in accordance with the principles of the present disclosures.
The Hall resistivity in ferromagnetic metals and alloys in a polycrystalline form is given by:
ρH=R0B+μ0RSMS
where R0 is the ordinary Hall constant, RS is the extraordinary or spontaneous Hall constant, B is the magnetic induction, Ms is the saturation magnetization, and μ0 is the permeability of the free space. The first term is due to the Lorentz force acting on the charge carriers and is present in nonmagnetic materials as well. The second term is a characteristic of the magnetic state of the material and is proportional to the magnetization. Generally, in the materials tested in the laboratory, e.g., TbCo and TbFeCo, R0 is much less than RS, thus ρH≈μ0RSMS.
As
While various embodiments in accordance with the principles disclosed herein have been described above, it should be understood that they have been presented by way of example only, and not limitation. Thus, the breadth and scope of the invention(s) should not be limited by any of the above-described exemplary embodiments, but should be defined only in accordance with any claims and their equivalents issuing from this disclosure. Furthermore, the above advantages and features are provided in described embodiments, but shall not limit the application of such issued claims to processes and structures accomplishing any or all of the above advantages.
Additionally, the section headings herein are provided for consistency with the suggestions under 37 CFR 1.77 or otherwise to provide organizational cues. These headings shall not limit or characterize the invention(s) set out in any claims that may issue from this disclosure. Specifically and by way of example, although the headings refer to a “Technical Field,” such claims should not be limited by the language chosen under this heading to describe the so-called technical field. Further, a description of a technology in the “Background” is not to be construed as an admission that technology is prior art to any invention(s) in this disclosure. Neither is the “Summary” to be considered as a characterization of the invention(s) set forth in issued claims. Furthermore, any reference in this disclosure to “invention” in the singular should not be used to argue that there is only a single point of novelty in this disclosure. Multiple inventions may be set forth according to the limitations of the multiple claims issuing from this disclosure, and such claims accordingly define the invention(s), and their equivalents, that are protected thereby. In all instances, the scope of such claims shall be considered on their own merits in light of this disclosure, but should not be constrained by the headings set forth herein.
Lai, Chih-Huang, Wang, Yu-Jen, Tang, Denny, Wu, Chih-Huo
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